Three of the Best Sold Secure Rated Bike Locks

It’s easy to understand why a bike lock is never considered an exciting purchase. You’ve just splashed out on a super amazing new £1,000 carbon dream machine, and now you’re being told you need to spend a further £100 to keep it safe? Not a great thing to hear. However, it’s often quoted that you should look to spend 10% of the value of your bike on a lock.

I am sorry to bring bad news, but Transport for London tell us that around 20,000 bicycles are reported stolen each year. Considering many people don’t actually report a theft, that’s a lot of runaway bikes in the capital, so you do need to protect yourself.

Sold Secure

Most brands have a rating scale for their lock, but insurance companies usually want you to have a Sold Secure rated lock, of a certain standard. Sold Secure are an independent organisation, that grade locks as Gold, Sliver or Bronze – Gold being the most thief proof. If your bike is insured and you don’t want to be told you are not covered in the event of a theft, make sure to stick with the regulation.

If you’ve chosen not to insure your bike, and you want a lock based upon how breakable it is, a Bronze rated lock can be busted in a minute with basic tools, Silver locks take three minutes with more tools, and Gold locks take five minutes with sophisticated tools.

Cable locks are light and easy to transport, but they’re also pretty easy to destroy with a pair of cable clippers. D-Locks are heavy and cumbersome, but they are safer as a rule, and chain locks are harder to break through.

Here’s a look at some of the best on the market at each sold secure level:

Boom! This one says don’t mess with me. And for your convenience, the chain lock folds up and comes with a storage pouch, ready to attach to your bike. At 85cm long, it will wind around the frame, through the wheels, and can be attached to a wider anchor, such as a lamppost. Protection comes from 5.5mm hardened steel links.

One customer review states: “The lock is a little on the heavy side but that is probably why it has such a good strength rating , and because it attaches lower on the bike where your water bottle would you don’t notice the weight as much.”

Admittedly, if you’ve bought a lovely light and lively bike, this might not be the ideal accessory, but bear in mind if you’re regularly commuting to the same location, such as work, you could find somewhere safe to leave it at your desk or in the reception – but this option isn’t available for everyone.

I really do think that Hiplok are onto a bit of a winner here. It’s simple – the lock sits around your hips – which means no nasty heavy lumps in your backpack, or weighing down your bike. Admittedly, the weight is still on you – so it will have the same adverse affect as gaining 1.8kg, but it’s kept central and in a more manageable position and doesn’t, for example, make just the back end of the bike feel heavy, as a seat post mounted lock would. The 9mm chain is encased in a 8mm material wrap, so you don’t experience any rubbing, and just to be quirky, this comes in several colours – safety can be cool!

Here’s a quick video to show how much the Hiplok (doesn’t) effect your movement:

Bronze is the lowest rating, and a minute with basic tools doesn’t sound too reassuring. However, this Abus lock does provide you with dual safety, through a cable and D-lock – which both use the same key, to reduce the liklihoood of that horrible “breaking into your own bike lock” experience. The system comes with a frame mount, too.

This system is good because it adheres to the method of locking that is often advised by industry experts. The most popular theory on the best way to lock your bike is that you use the D-lock to secure the frame and rear wheel to the secure object, then loop the cable through your front wheel, round the frame, and onto the d-lock – creating two security devices. If you can use the cable to fill any gaps in between the d-lock and the immovable object, this will help as it prevents a thief getting much leverage.

Bad grammar won’t stop your bike getting nicked, these locks might.
Informative article Michelle.
Just ignore the anal-retentive grammar Nazis. Their obsessive need to correct others for their mistakes is a direct result of the their own failure to accept their lives and desperate attempt to improve themselves to combat unhappiness.

Quite right! Hence my pervious puzzlement…. it never occurred to me somebody would make such a puerile criticism. Their spelling does not change their reasoning or their meaning. Those are the only important aspects. Somebody who had never been to school may have spent their every waking hour testing lock security and far less of it on literacy! 🙂

GRAMMAR: The difference between knowing your shit – and knowing you’re shit !!
I really can’t understand how people leave school being such DIMMOCKS that they confuse ‘there’ with ‘their’ – and even ‘they’re’, ‘were’ with ‘where’ and, oh, the list is SO long. I realise our species is pretty dumbass, or we wouldn’t now number 7.2 BILLION – a nightmare number for an aberrant chimpanzee, who should only really number 1 million or fewer, worldwide – but not to be master of your OWN, NATIVE language just leaves me astounded !!

Why no mention of Abus Granit X-Plus 54 230mm? An excellent lock. The brackets available are very versatile and reliable, the lock is very well designed despite being lighter than the competition it performs as well as them.

Are there other tools than….
– a wireless angle grinder, which is anything but discreet (www.youtube.com/watch?v=HpvTSZO11gw)
– picking locks, which requires quite some skills and isn’t easy to perform while bent over a bike (www.youtube.com/watch?v=_5UCpKLipQM)
?

Bolt cutters which go through some beefy Sold Secure Gold chains in under 20 seconds? https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VC3hFr8p2ck – OK, those are the “up the back of a long coat” size of cutters, but a thief will only look odd for a few seconds and won’t be as noisy as a power tool.

I bought Kryptonite Series 4 D-lock for my shiny new bike. While the lock itself is very good, the bracket to attach it to bike’s frame is absolutely hopeless. Fairly easy to mount but the lock rattles when riding so I bought Abus D-lock as well. On Abus the mounting bracket is excellent, no rattle and feels very sturdy.

My Kryptonite now lives on the rack at work so I don’t have to lug around 1.7kg of steel. Abus is kept at home for those rare moments when I have to take a lock with me to leave my bike unattended.

Pitlock skewers for wheels and a saddle save me from having to carry a cable with me to secure them.

Kryponite brackets are notoriously badly designed, particularly for use with heavier locks. The Abus EazyKF mount is excellent though.

I also have a Kryptonite NY Lock which I’ve relegated to being my leave-at-work lock at it’s too damned heavy and the bracket is rubbish. Interesting that the American-designed Krypto have a basic manual plastic sliding cover to protect the keyhole from weather and debris whereas the Abus X-Plus 54 has an integrated keyhole cover mechanism.

Kryptonite NY locks are also prone to seizing up in my experience – when left out in the rain it doesn’t take long before rusty brown water is collecting within. Never had that problem with Abus X-Plus 54.